Unity in action against the IS is the spur for Kurdish unity
South of Kobane, Syria, on March 21, the Islamic State
(IS) confronted the Kurdish People’s Protection Units (YPG) and the
Iraqi Kurdish peshmerga. Western bombers continued to hit IS
targets, although these raids did not seem to stop the ferocious attacks
from IS against the Kurdish positions. Both sides claim small
victories, but these are minor skirmishes. Last year, rapid IS advances
drew their fighters deep into Syrian Kurdish territory, with the virtual
seizure of Kobane by September. Kurdish fighters, with Western air
support, pushed IS out of Kobane by the end of January — but they could
not remove IS from the Kurdish regions that border Turkey.
The
presence of Iraqi Kurdish fighters in Syrian Kurdistan (Rojava) is
remarkable. Turkey’s government, long an adversary of Kurdish
self-determination, allowed the Iraqi Kurds to transit through their
country. The peshmerga brought much-needed logistical support for
the beleaguered Syrian fighters. Their new allies, the YPG, are members
of a political front with close ties to the Kurdistan Workers’ Party
(PKK), denoted as a terrorist group both by Turkey and the United
States. Iraq’s peshmerga is allied with the U.S. That the peshmerga are
now fighting alongside the YPG — a creation of the PKK for Syria —
suggests the shifting of allegiances in the region. The threat of the IS
is sufficient for geopolitical animosities to be held in check.
The
Kurdish people are spread out over four countries — Iran, Iraq, Syria
and Turkey. Syria has the smallest number of Kurds; Turkey the largest.
The territory of the Kurdish people is not entirely contiguous. Syria’s
Kurds live in three discontinuous pockets in the north, along the border
with Turkey. Culture and language unite the Kurds, but politics divides
them. Iraqi Kurdish leader Massoud Barzani’s Kurdistan Democratic Party
and the PKK have vied for leadership over the Kurdish struggle. Mr.
Barzani told al-Hayat recently that the emergence of the IS poses
an “existential threat” to Kurdish aspirations. No wonder that he and
imprisoned PKK leader Abdullah Öcalan have begun to negotiate once more
for a stronger Kurdish National Congress, an umbrella group of Kurdish
organisations. Unity in action against the IS is the spur, not
irredentism.
Mr. Öcalan’s olive branch to Mr.
Barzani comes alongside a renewed call by him for a new agreement with
the Turkish state. The PKK has conducted a 30-year bloody, and largely
futile, armed struggle against the Turkish state. The “Solution Process”
between the government of Recep Tayyip Erdog˘an and the PKK took place
under the shadow of the civil war in Syria. Turkey anticipated being
drawn into the post-Assad order in Syria, and so Mr. Erdog˘an wanted an
entente with the PKK within Turkey. At the Nowruz celebrations of 2013,
Mr. Öcalan announced a ceasefire. Matters seemed to favour the peace
process until the Syrian war went against Mr. Erdog˘an’s hopes, and the
Syrian Kurds took advantage of the chaos to declare the formation of the
province of Rojava. Mr. Erdog˘an backed off from the peace process,
shelling PKK camps rather than aiding their struggle against the IS. Mr.
Öcalan this year has called for a ceasefire again, but it is unlikely
to be taken seriously by Mr. Erdog˘an.
The Turkish
President is faced with a dilemma. Turkish chauvinist sentiment favours
his party. This is why he recently said that Turkey has no Kurdish
problem. Meanwhile, discontent against Mr. Erdog˘an suggests that his AK
Party will not do as well as forecast in the June parliamentary
elections. The pro-Kurdish and leftist People’s Democratic Party (HDP)
will go to the polls led by Figen Yüksekdað. Mr. Öcalan’s plea for a
ceasefire would bring the PKK to work openly for Ms. Yüksekdað’s party —
and would likely allow the HDP to break the 10 per cent threshold,
denying Mr. Erdog˘an his parliamentary super-majority. If Mr. Erdog˘an
accepts the ceasefire, he provides the advantage to the HDP; if he
rejects it, he emboldens his chauvinist allies but weakens his control
over Turkey’s institutions.
Turkey’s stubborn view
that the primary problem in Syria is the Assad government has prevented
its entry into the fight against the IS. At most, Ankara has hardened
the official border posts to Syria, although wounded IS fighters seem to
find their way into Turkish hospitals, and resupply from Turkey to the
IS continues. Turkey’s reticence to come out openly against the IS
brought the Iraqi Kurds into alliance with the Syrian Kurds. When the
Iraqi Kurds came under threat from the IS last year, the Iranian
government came immediately to their aid. “Turkey wants influence in
Iraq,” said Mr. Barzani, “but Iran acted more accurately and faster.”
The distance from Turkey indicated by Mr. Barzani allows the Syrian and
Iraqi Kurds space for closeness.
While the Iraqi Kurdish peshmerga
receives aid from the U.S. and Iran, the resource-strapped YPG-PKK
fighters have taken significant casualties because of the two-faced
Turkish policy and the reticence of the U.S. to aid a group that they
deem to be a terrorist force. The YPG’s political leadership has
appealed to the West for military supplies, but to no avail.
Mr.
Barzani recently disparaged the colonial Sykes-Picot borders as “always
artificial.” Yet, Mr. Barzani is committed to some version of Iraq,
although accusations that the peshmerga have been denying Sunni
Arabs the right to return to their homes suggests otherwise. Pressure on
Mr. Barzani to remain within Iraq will come not only from the West but
also from Iran. Iran has its own Kurdish population. It is unwilling to
countenance talk of Kurdistan.
Vijay Prashad at The Hindu.
(Vijay Prashad is the Chief Editor at LeftWord Books, New Delhi.)
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